Continental Shelf
Submerged part of the continent
Gently sloping (less than one tenth of a degree)
Up to 1500 km wide; averages 80 km wide
Water depth at seaward edge averages 130 m (about 400 feet)
Locally cut by canyons (eroded by rivers during the Ice Age low sea level stand)
Continental Slope
Boundary between continental and oceanic crust
Steeply sloping compared to shelf (averages about 5 degree slope, up to 25 degrees)
May be about 20 km wide
Continental Rise
At base of continental slope; slope angle decreasesAt mouths of submarine canyons, deep-sea fans are present
May be hundreds of km wide
Thick accumulation of sediment transported downslope from continental shelf
May be carved by turbidity currents - bottom-currents carrying suspended sediment downslope
As the currents slow, the suspended sediments begin to settle out; larger and heavier grains settle first.
Graded beds called turbidites are deposited by turbidity currents.
Abyssal Plain
Part of the deep ocean basin (see below)
Deep Ocean Basins
Contain abyssal plains, deep sea trenches, and seamounts
Cover about 30% of Earth's surface
Abyssal Plain
Flat, deep ocean floor.
Depth may be 2 - 3 miles or more
Thick accumulations of sediment bury topography of oceanic crust
Types of sea floor sediments:
Terrigenous sediment
Mineral grains from weathered continental rocks
Fine-grained sediment (clay, mud)
Accumulates slowly (5000 to 50,000 years to deposit 1 cm)
Color may be black, red or brown
Biogenous
sediment
Biological origin - primarily shells and skeletons of microscopic
plankton
Calcareous oozes
Remains of foraminifera and coccolithophores
May form chalk
Siliceous oozes
Remains of radiolarians and diatoms
May form diatomite or chert
Phosphatic material
From bones, teeth and scales of fish
Hydrogenous
sediment
(Authigenic or diagenetic minerals)
Minerals that precipitate from sea water by chemical reactions.
Example: manganese nodules
Deep Sea Trenches
The deepest part of the oceans
May exceed 10,000 m deep (30,000 feet, or nearly 5 miles)
Deepest is Mariana trench in Pacific Ocean (more than 11,000 m or 33,000 ft)
Occur at subduction zones where oceanic crust is forced downward into the mantle
Associated with earthquakes (Benioff Zones) and volcanoes
Seamounts
Undersea volcanic peaks which formed along mid-ocean ridges or over hot spots
May be eroded flat on top and called guyots
Subsidence occurs after volcanic activity ceases; crust moves away from ridge or off hot spot.
May be ringed by coral reefs called atolls (circular reef surrounding lagoon over now-submerged volcanic peak)